thoughtsthoughtsthoughts--disqus
ThoughtsThoughtsThoughts
thoughtsthoughtsthoughts--disqus

Fifteen, scarily enough, but I have no idea how expensive that kind of effect would have been in 2000. I thought it was cheap enough that Buffy did it in the same year, but then I remembered that the other Xander in "The Replacement" was played by Nicholas Brendon's twin brother.

That's the best story I've heard this week.

I only found out about a year and a half ago when I watched one of Disney Channel's late-night Cadet Kelly rebroadcasts.

For me, it'll always be the discovery that the guy I thought was in everything—Iceman from X-Men, Jake from Animorphs, Troy from Veronica Mars, Jimmy Olsen from Smallville, Steve Jinks from Warehouse 13, Mike Weston from The Following, and any number of major and supporting roles in early 2000s Disney movies/TV

I feel it's important to let people know when they've been excellent (I'm all about boosting the world's self-esteem), so you should know that I laughed harder at "white Rami Malek" than I've laughed at anything in weeks.

It's crazy what a difference seeing art in person can make. I have seen so many paintings that stopped me in my tracks in museums, that I wouldn't have looked at for three seconds in a book.

Into the Woods.

NBC, the time has come. You need to stop. Stop making television. Give yourself a pat on the back for 75 years of good work (well, just work, toward the end there), and dissolve. It's scary, I know. But to the well-ordered mind, death is but the next great adventure.

The AV Club
It's just a bunch of people making fun of NBC.

Any time someone tries to make me choose something—where are we having dinner, what do you want to watch, etc.—and I don't have a preference, I pull out my best Rick Grimes voice and shout, "I don't make decisions anymore!"

"Not for nothing" also makes frequent appearances in his work.

That's exactly what I took away from it, making this episode of BoJack Horseman the comedic version of Never Let Me Go.

I just had the strangest urge to call "SPOILERS!" for a Scooby Doo show, but I guess that the long line of teen sleuths thing is one of the things you find out pretty early.

Back when my goddaughter was about this age, I watched an episode of The Backyardigans with her called "Samurai Pie." I don't know if it was just the best episode of the series or if I was in a weird mood that day, but it completely tickled me, and when she watched TV when I was babysitting her, I would always try to

Mystery Incorporated's Fred is great because he is simultaneously the goofiest and the stealth-darkest character on the show. It's all traps, traps, traps, and then a cheerfully delivered line about his father's complete lack of regard for him.

Good intentions don't necessarily negate somebody's right to be angry. There are cases where good intentions mitigate a situation, and there are cases where the good intentions themselves are kind of part of the problem.

This is not the first time that I've seen someone make a joke to this effect about USA, and I'm a little baffled. Literally the only USA shows with a character's name in the title are Monk and Rush, neither of which are actually very informative titles. USA titles can tend toward cutesy, but on average they're

I feel like I'm showing my geekery about the wrong things here, but: Joshua was born about a season and a half before the show ended.

I have seen every episode of Girl Meets World. It is a terrible show that's all the worse for the occasional glimmers of the better show that it could be. I basically think of it as the Disney Channel's version of Glee, that way.

Well, yeah, I mean, if you wanna get technical about it.